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Friday, March 20, 2015

I've always felt so grateful to the authors that take the time to connect with
me through social media. In my mind, I'd always thought they were on an
unattainable level. In this event, I want to get to know the authors; to see them for the people
they are and not just as creators of your favorite book.

Note: For each post, links are left to the author's social media.
If you know an author whose book has affected you [in my event or just
in general,] please use one of those links and leave a nice message to
them! Something as simple as "I'm such a huge fan of your work" can go a
long way - you'd be surprised. For a full definition, the author schedule [and a fabulous opening giveaway,] click here.

I have a love for books that shatter my soul with beautiful words and touching plots. So when I heard about All The Bright Places, I jumped! It sounded so perfect for me, so it's no surprise I had to ask Jennifer to appear on my blog and I'm so excited!

In All the Bright Places, Theodore Finch and Violet Markey meet on the ledge of their high school bell tower. He’s the school freak, she’s popular and well liked. Naturally everyone thinks she saved him from jumping, but the reality is that they were both up there contemplating death—Violet because she’s grieving over the death of her sister Eleanor, nine months earlier, and Finch because contemplating death is what he does.

I needed an organic way to bring these two together off that bell tower ledge, especially because I knew the withdrawn Violet would want nothing to do with the unpredictable, volatile Finch. So I gave them a school assignment: to wander their home state of Indiana. When the teacher announces that they’ll be doing this in pairs, Finch ambushes Violet into being his partner.

Now, I grew up in Indiana, where—as far as I was concerned—nothing interesting ever happened. My town was comprised of many, many cornfields and not much else. When my parents moved us there my fourth grade year, I believed it was a torture akin to, say, moving to Mars, and at first sight, I thought Indiana was the ugliest place I had ever seen. “Just remember,” my mother told me, “what is ugly to you is beautiful to some people.” As we crossed the state line from Ohio into Indiana, I looked out the window at cornfield after cornfield. At one point, there was an actual tractor driving down the road. A tractor! And I thought how wrong my mother was. I couldn’t imagine anyone thinking Indiana was beautiful.

Like Violet, I grew up counting the days till high school graduation, which signified my escape from the Midwest.

In All the Bright Places, Finch takes immediate charge of the Wander Indiana geography project. It’s his idea that he and Violet see “the grand, the small, the bizarre, the poetic, the beautiful, the ugly, the surprising. But absolutely, unconditionally, resolutely nothing ordinary.” It’s also his idea that they leave something behind, a kind of offering.

While I was plotting the book, I made a list of unusual places—some I’d been to when I was living there, others I discovered in my research. The stranger the places were, the better. I have a giant gas station map of Indiana, which I pinned to my wall, and on this I mapped out all the possible sites Finch and Violet could visit. Only one spot is made up—the Bookmobile Park. All the others are real.

The only one I knew I would include was Hoosier Hill, the highest spot in Indiana. This is located only a few miles from the town where I grew up, and it’s pretty legendary. It’s 1,257 feet above sea level and resembles a pitcher’s mound. When I was Violet’s age, I laughed about it—my roots are, after all, in the North Carolina mountains— but something happened when I started writing the scene between Finch and Violet at Hoosier Hill. I began seeing things in a new way.

As they stand atop the high point, Violet looks out at the dirt and the corn and that’s all she sees. But Finch sees beyond those things. He sees Violet standing next to him and feels her hand in his. He sees hope and promise. Someone who could become a friend, maybe more. Someone who isn’t telling him he’s worthless. Someone who makes him feel as if he might actually matter after all. Standing next to her, Hoosier Hill feels as high as Everest, and Finch is on top of the world.

With each place they wander—whether it’s the local Purina Tower, the Blue Hole, or the Before I Die art installation—Violet gradually begins to see Indiana through the eyes of Finch. She recognizes there’s wonder in the little things, the little moments, the quiet, unassuming places. And she recognizes there’s wonder in him, this person she thought she knew but didn’t. Until now.

So Finch not only shows Violet that Indiana can be beautiful, he shows her it is full of bright places. He showed me as well. All these years after high school graduation, both my parents are gone. I’m an only child, and I don’t have any family left in Indiana. But when I go back there, I see them in this place and that one. They are everywhere, and it’s amazing.

Maybe my favorite location that Finch and Violet visit is the Blue Flash backyard rollercoaster. John Ivers is a retired farmer who invented the coaster because he loved the rush of going fast and “impending, weightless doom,” a line I quote in the book. His wife, Sharon, told me that “being a bright place has been for us touching the hearts of others and reminding them that in this time of hard things it is important to take time and have some fun.”

This is exactly what Finch and Violet did on their journey, and what Finch taught Violet as she learns to live again. I’ll always be grateful to Finch for reminding me that sometimes we need to look deeper at a place and at the people around us in order to truly see them.

(Note: In April, my book tour takes me to Indiana, and I’ll be reconstructing that journey myself with photos, video, and a post or two!)

I love authors who use their hometown in their books! It's one thing to describe a place based off pictures from an extensive google search and a whole thing entirely to go to the place and experience what the characters feel [especially if you've lived there for quite some time!]

Enter the giveaway below! Thanks for checking out my blog and remember: Be kind to one another. - Ellen Want more fun? Check out the other authors featuredhere.

By the time I was ten, I had already written numerous songs, a poem
for Parker Stevenson ("If there were a Miss America for men, You would
surely win"), two autobiographies (All About Me and My Life in Indiana: I Will Never Be Happy Again),
a Christmas story, several picture books (which I illustrated myself)
featuring the Doodle Bugs from Outer Space, a play about Laura Ingalls
Wilder's sister entitled Blindness Strikes Mary, a series of
prison mysteries, a collection of short stories featuring me as the main
character (an internationally famous rock star detective), and a
partially finished novel about Vietnam. I was also an excellent speller
from a very early age.
In 2000, I started writing full-time, and I haven't stopped...
I've written eight books, and when I'm not working on the ninth, I'm
contributing to my web magazine, Germ, thinking up new books, and dabbling in TV. I am always writing.

This is an amazing giveaway that you don't want to miss. I'm so jealous of the winner because I can't enter! Thank you SO MUCH, Jennifer for this fantastic giveaway.
And to the entrants, good luck <3

This is a great interview and response, and I love how you emphasize the change in perspective between the two characters. Awesome stuff! And, for the record, my bright place is simply with my family. :)

My gosh, I loved All The Bright Places so much. I love how Jennifer based so much of it off her experience and home state. I am now going to resist from crying after reading this beautiful post. <3 I'll definitely be checking out those posts of Jennifer's.

My bright place is my bedroom. Or a walk or dinner table with all my family there. Or the library. that is where I feel safe, loved and belonging. I loved this post- I'm currently halfway through All the Bright Places on audio, and it is so interesting hearing about the authors though process a little bit.

My bright place is at home, book store, and NY. Home is where the heart is. The book store for my love of books, NY because there are many fond memories and adventures with my cousin. Thank you for this amazing chance! :)

Share your thoughts! I'm always looking for insight from other readers because hey - your opinion matters! Also, if no one's told you yet, I just want to say that I love your smile and that you should grace all of us with it.

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About Me

nova lee zaiden has spent five years in prison for hacking the pentagon. she's discovered top government secrets and the knowledge could kill her. after escaping, she now hides undercover at local high school in hopes of survival.
if all goes well, she leaves unscathed. if not, she and the cute boy in her math class will have to go on the run. it doesn't help that said boy is the son of the man who wants her dead. they'll have to fight against all odds to expose shocking secrets while resisting their own fatal attraction...
however, since nothing like that has happened yet, you can find nova in her room reading YA books, drinking tea and writing about her fangirl feels.